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New stamp celebrates the life and times of Helen Suzman

She devoted her life to fight against apartheid, and the SA Post Office has issued a postage stamp to celebrate her life and achievements.

Helen Suzman, anti-apartheid and human-rights activist and founding member of the Progressive Party, was born a hundred year ago on, 7 November.

She devoted her life to fight against apartheid, and the SA Post Office has issued a postage stamp to celebrate her life and achievements.

The stamp sheet was designed by Rachel Ackermann of the SA Post Office, and the stamps can be used as postage on ordinary domestic stamps.

The stamps cost R3,90 each and can be ordered from SA.Stamps@postoffice.co.za and will be for sale at all major post offices.

A limited number of 30 000 stamp sheets will be printed. Compared to the 2,5 million items that the Post Office delivers each work day, this is a very limited number.

Helen Suzman was born Helen Gavronsky on November 7, 1917 in Germiston, South Africa.

Unlike many white children of her time, she was aware of inequality based on religion, race and culture as her parents were Lithuanian Jews who had immigrated to South Africa to escape oppression.

She went to Wits University after matriculation, married cardiologist Moses Meyer Suzman and completed her degree in economics and economic history in 1940. By 1945 she had become a tutor at Wits and a mother of two girls, Frances and Patricia.

Helen Suzman became an MP in 1953 and served for a further 36 years. For six of those years she was the only female in a very patriarchal parliament where she consistently challenged discriminatory legislation and the spate of security laws introduced by the Apartheid government.

Helen’s refusal to be indifferent towards the injustice around her did not go unnoticed.

A young Helen Suzman. Image: www.isgeschiedenis.nl

She was twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize and received 27 honorary doctorates, but refused to be made a Dame of the British Empire.

She became famous for her answer when a minister blamed her for the world’s negative view of South Africa:  “It is not my questions that are an embarrassment, it is your answers,” she said.

She visited political prisoners, angering her fellow members of Parliament.

According to Nelson Mandela, Helen was the first woman that they had ever seen on Robben Island when she visited him and other prisoners in 1967.

Read: Race relations at crossroads in Mandela’s S.Africa

His esteem for her becomes clear from his message for her 85th birthday: “We can but pay tribute to you, thank you and let you know how fortunate our country feels for having had you as part of its public life and politics.”

Later in her life, Helen became President of the South African Institute for Race Relations and a member of the South African Human Rights Commission. She also served as a delegate to the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA).

Helen Suzman died on 1 January 2009.  She had lived for 91 years, and retained her vision and purpose to the end.

Source: SA Post Office

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